Africville : an African Nova Scotian community is demolished - and fights back / by Gloria Wesley. Toronto, ON : J. Lorimer & Co., 2019. 94 pages : illustrations ; 29 cm.
Nova Scotia Archives Library - FC2346.9 B6 W48 2019 - Open Shelf
The community of Africville began in the early 1800s with the settlement of former American slaves and other black people on the Beford Basin, just north of Halifax. Over time the community grew to include a church, a school, and small businesses. At its peak, about 400 people lived in the tight-knit community of Africville. But the neighbourhood was not without its problems. Racist attitudes prevented people from getting well-paying jobs outside the community and the City of Halifax denied the residents of Africville basic services such as running water, sewage disposal, and garbage collection. Despite being labeled a "slum," the community was lively and vibrant, with a strong sense of culture and tradition. In the 1960s, in the name of urban renewal, the City of Halifax decided to demolish the community, relocate its residents and use the land for industrial development. Residents of Africville strongly opposed this move, but their homes were bulldozed and they were forced into public housing projects in other parts of the city, and promised, but did not receive social assistance to help them resettle. After years of pressure from former members of the community and their descendants, the City of Halifax finally apologized for the destruction of Africville and offered to pay compensation. Through historical photographs, documents, and first-person narratives from former Africville residents, this book offers an account of the racism behind the injustices suffered by the community. It documents how the City destroyed Africville and finally apologized for it. Part of the "Righting Canada's Wrongs" Series.
Africville (Halifax, N.S.) — History — 20th century
Africville (Halifax, N.S.) — Social conditions — 20th century
Black Canadians — Nova Scotia — Halifax — Social conditions — 20th century
Relocation (Housing) — Nova Scotia — Halifax — History — 20th century
Race discrimination — Nova Scotia — Halifax — History — 20th century
Halifax (N.S.) — Ethnic relations — History — 20th century
Halifax (N.S.) — History — 20th century
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please note : not all titles are available on the Internet Archive42330
The Hermit of Africville : The life of Eddie Carvery / Jon Tattrie. East Lawrencetown, NS : Pottersfield Press, 2010. 206 pages : portraits ; 23 cm.
Nova Scotia Archives Library - FC2346.26 C37 T38 2010 - Open Shelf
Eddie Carvery was born in Africville, Nova Scotia, when the African-Nova Scotian seaside village in Halifax was midway through its third century. As a teenager, he watched his world torn down as his friends and family were compelled to leave. After Africville was bulldozed in the 1960s under the guise of 'urban renewal, ' Eddie Carvery returned to the site of his former hometown and pitched a tent in protest. After forays into careers as a community organizer, sheet-metal worker, and fisherman, Eddie returned to the ruins of Africville in 1970 to start his protest for the reclamation of his people's land and history. Forty years, three families, seven heart attacks, and numerous attempts on his life later, he remains living on the land where he was born.
Carvery, Eddie
Africville (Halifax Regional Municipality, N.S.) — Biography
Africville (Halifax, N.S.) — Biography
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please note : not all titles are available on the Internet Archive42328
Africville: the Spirit Lives - In Ember, vol. 1, no. 1, March 1991, pp. 10-13 1991. pages 10-13.
Nova Scotia Archives Library - use request slip - V/F V.401 #7 - Vertical File
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please note : not all titles are available on the Internet Archive39565
The Spirit of Africville and Remember Africville / prepared by Jocelyn Dorrington. Halifax : Maritext, 1993.
Nova Scotia Archives Library - use request slip - V/F V.399 #13 - Vertical File
Includes index.
Black Canadians — Nova Scotia — Halifax — Social conditions — Study and teaching (Secondary)
Africville (Halifax, N.S.) — History — Study and teaching (Secondary)
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please note : not all titles are available on the Internet Archive39502
From Africville to New Road: how four communities planned their development / Althea J. Tolliver and James A. Francois. Halifax: McCurdy Printing & Typesetting Ltd., 1983. 33 pages : illustrations; 28 cm.
Nova Scotia Archives Library - use request slip - V/F V.280 #3 - Vertical File
Black United Front of Nova Scotia. Watershed Joint Action Committee
Regional planning — Nova Scotia — Halifax (County)
Halifax (N.S. : County) — Regional planning
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please note : not all titles are available on the Internet Archive36044
Africville relocation report -- Supplement Halifax : Institute of Public affairs, Dalhousie University., 1973. v.
Nova Scotia Archives Library - use request slip - LED15IPno.102 Supp.
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please note : not all titles are available on the Internet Archive16379
Africville relocation report Halifax : Institute of Public affairs, Dalhousie University., 1971. 396, A135 pages
Nova Scotia Archives Library - use request slip - LED15IPno.102
another copy of report only: HV4050 H17 C58
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please note : not all titles are available on the Internet Archive16378
The Spirit of Africville / selected and edited by the Africville Genealogy Society ; with contributions by Donald Clairmont. Halifax : Formac Pub. Co., 1992. 124 pages : illustrations (some col.) ; 21 x 27 cm.
Nova Scotia Archives Library - use request slip - HV4050 H17 A258 5799
A Maritext book. Errata slip laid in.
Clairmont, Donald H. (Donald Hayden), 1938-
Relocation (Housing) — Nova Scotia — Halifax
Urban renewal — Nova Scotia — Halifax
Black Canadians — Nova Scotia — Halifax — Social conditions
Black Canadians — Nova Scotia — Halifax — Relocation
A
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please note : not all titles are available on the Internet Archive13985
Africville : the life and death of a Canadian black community / Donald H. Clairmont and Dennis William Magill. Rev. ed. Toronto : Canadian Scholars' Press, 1987. iii, 250 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm.
Nova Scotia Archives Library - use request slip - HV4050 H17 C585 1987
Relocation (Housing) — Nova Scotia — Halifax
Blacks — Nova Scotia — Halifax — Social conditions
Africville (Halifax, N.S.)
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please note : not all titles are available on the Internet Archive13961
Africville: the life and death of a Canadian community
Nova Scotia Archives Library - use request slip - HV4050 H17 C585
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please note : not all titles are available on the Internet Archive13960
Africville relocation report Halifax : Institute of Public Affairs, Dalhousie University, 1971. 396, A135 pages
Nova Scotia Archives Library - use request slip - HV4050 H17 C58
second copy from 1974 with supplement published as no. 102 in I.P.A. current publications -- LE DISIP no.102
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please note : not all titles are available on the Internet Archive13959
Spirit of Africville Halifax : Formac Publishing Co. Ltd., 1992. 124 pages
Nova Scotia Archives Library - use request slip - HV4050 H17 A258 S759
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please note : not all titles are available on the Internet Archive13958
Africville : a spirit that lives on Halifax : Art Gallery, Mount Saint Vincent University, 1989. 24 pages : illustrations ; 22 x 28 cm.
Nova Scotia Archives Library - use request slip - HV4050 H17 A258
Co-published by Black Cultural Centre for Nova Scotia, Africville Genealogy Society, and National Film Board, Atlantic Centre. Catalogue of an exhibition held at the Art Gallery, Mount Saint Vincent University, Oct. 1989, and touring Canada from July 1990-Dec. 1992, thereafter to be on permanent display at the Black Cultural Centre, Westphal, Dartmouth. Issued also in French.
Africville Genealogy Society
Black Cultural Centre for Nova Scotia
Mount Saint Vincent University. Art Gallery
National Film Board of Canada. Atlantic Centre.
Blacks — Nova Scotia — Halifax — History — Exhibitions
Africville (Halifax, N.S.) — History — Exhibitions
Africville (Halifax, N.S.) — Biography — Exhibitions.
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please note : not all titles are available on the Internet Archive13957
The children of Africville / Christine Welldon. Halifax : Nimbus Publishing, 2009. 81 pages: illustrations (some colour), portraits; 22 cm.
Nova Scotia Archives Library - FC2346.9 B6 W447 2009 - Open Shelf
Children — Nova Scotia — Halifax — Social conditions — 20th century — Juvenile literature
Black Canadians — Nova Scotia — Halifax — Social conditions — 20th century — Juvenile literature
"Africville (Halifax, N.S.)–
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Nova Scotia Archives — https://archives.novascotia.ca/library/catalogue/
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